Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Why army camps in north Kashmir are vulnerable to militant attacks

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Yet another militant attack on an Indian Army camp in Kupwara on Thursday, killing Capt Ayush Yadav and two soldiers, has exposed the vulnerabil­ity of military camps in north Kashmir. The camps are strategica­lly located to thwart aggression from Pakistan and to guard against infiltrati­on.

Here’s why the camps are easy targets.

NEAR THE LoC: The militant attacks on the army camps in Kupwara on Thursday and Uri last September show the attackers made the border bases their targets within days of infiltrati­ng. Instead of moving into the hinterland, they struck the Kupwara camp within 5km of the Line of Control and the Uri camp, which is 6km from the LoC in north Kashmir’s Baramulla district.

ISOLATED IN FORESTS: Both attacks on army camps were carried out from the rear. The camps are located on foothills and are isolated. They are amid forests that connect into a mountain range.

AMMO STORES: The army camps supply men and material to guard the LoC. The camps are heavily guarded with layers of security as they have arms stores. Targeting an army camp is aimed at destroying supplies and arms. By attacking in the wee hours, militants hope to catch soldiers off guard.

GATEWAY OF INFILTRATI­ON: Being a frontier district makes Kupwara the first stop of militants before they venture into the hinterland.

FOREIGN MILITANTS: There has been a spike in number of foreign militants infiltrati­ng into Kashmir and they find the camps easy targets.

SUMMER HEAT: With summer arriving in the Kashmir Valley, the snow has begun melting along the LoC, making it prone to infiltrati­on bids by militants. More militants are pushed through the LoC by their Pakistani handlers.

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